Today we face a climate of ever increasing misdirection by popular media. This site, along with others, aims to reveal the reality of America and the loss of fact inherent to the over riding theme of our current political and social confusion: Purposeful deception.

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

The Election We Should Be Following

For progressives and populists around the country who take an interest in Congressional races there are always a few good challengers we might hope to send to Washington.Incumbents, we assume, can take care of themselves.

But in Northern Ohio, redistricting has thrown two incumbents into one district.It's a heavily Democratic district created purposely to guarantee a number of other districts to Republicans.The incumbents are both Democrats, both white, both 65, and many imagine that they do

similar work in Washington.In fact, they could not be more

different.One of them does tremendous good for our national

politics, working to move our government in a better direction from

inside it, just as the rest of us do from the outside.We cannot

afford to lose him.We would be obliged to work for his reelection

even if his opponent were far above average.The record suggests

something else.

A useful example to highlight the contrast between Congressman Dennis

Kucinich and Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur is found in the funding of

wars.Between 2001 and 2009, Congresswoman Kaptur voted for $545

billion in war funding, voting Yes over and over again for Bush's

wars.Congressman Dennis Kucinich voted for a total of $17 billion.

(See the chart below.)

In the lead up to the invasion of Iraq, Kucinich's was the clearest

voice against it.He circulated evidence of war lies to his

colleagues.He organized many of them to vote No with him.Kaptur,

too, voted No on the authorization.

But once the war had started, many Congress members, including Kaptur,

turned around and voted to fund its continuation and escalation, year

after year, even as the public turned more and more strongly against

the war.While Kucinich was working to impeach Bush and Cheney,

Kaptur was voting to fund their wars.While Kucinich was advancing

resolutions to shift the debate toward ending wars and preventing new

ones, Kaptur was claiming wars made us safer and reciting "support the

troops" rhetoric, as though what veterans need most is the creation of

more injured veterans.

This distinction matters more than ever as the prospect of a war on

Iran looms larger.Kaptur wants NASA and the Pentagon to work

together more closely, while Kucinich opposes the militarization of

space.Kaptur seems to believe the military industrial complex is a

beneficial jobs program, whereas Kucinich seems to believe it is what

Eisenhower said it would be.

Congresswoman Kaptur has been spending a lot of money on television

ads in hopes of defeating Kucinich in the upcoming primary.Where

does her money come from?Well, according to the Center for

Responsive Politics (OpenSecrets.org), in the current election cycle,

she gets 77% of her money from PACs, and 5% from small individual

contributors.Kucinich, in contrast, gets 5% from PACs, and 68% from

small individual contributors.Kucinich does not get money from war

contractors. Kaptur is a different story.Thus far, in the current

election cycle, her fourth biggest "contributor" is a little operation

known as General Dynamics.Her third biggest is Teledyne

Technologies.Tied for seventh place are American Systems Corp and

Northrop Grumman.Tied at 16th are Boeing and Lockheed Martin.Most

of these corporations have been among Kaptur's regular funders in past

campaigns as well.They are also among the leading violators of U.S.

laws.

According to the Federal Contractor Misconduct Database

(ContractorMisconduct.org), these are the worst four offenders from

any industry:

ContractorFederal Contract $

Instances of MisconductMisconduct $

(Since 1995) (FY2010)

1. Lockheed Martin$34367.4m

57$590.1m

2. Boeing Company$19366.6m

43$1600.5m

3. Northrop Grumman$15522.7m

35$850.7m

4. General Dynamics$14908.8m

13$78.5m

Among the types of misconduct engaged in by these four leaders, as

detailed at the above database, are the following: contract fraud,

kickbacks, defective pricing, unlicensed exports, emissions

violations, groundwater cleanup violations, inflated costs, providing

of bribes and sexual favors, nuclear safety violations, nuclear waste

storage violations, federal election law violations, radiation

exposure, illegal transfer of information to China, violations of the

National Labor Relations Act, embezzlement, racial discrimination and

retaliation, age discrimination and retaliation, unauthorized weapons

sales to foreign nations, retaliation against whistleblowers.And

that's just Lockheed.In fact, that's just a small sampling of just

Lockheed.Why take money from these companies?

According to the National Priorities Project (CostOfWar.com) Kaptur's

Ninth District of Ohio (prior to redistricting) has shelled out over

$3.1 billion for wars since 2001.That expense has been with Kaptur's

full cooperation.And that is an expense measured purely in dollars

taken from tax payers to pay for wars.It does not include further

costs for veterans' care, for interest on war debt, for increased fuel

prices, or for lost opportunities.Nor does it include the cost

already extracted of several times the $3.1 billion for a base annual

military budget that has roughly doubled this decade and done so on

the basis of the wars.

According to a report titled "The U.S. Employment Effects of Military

And Domestic Spending Priorities: An Updated Analysis," (PDF) by

Robert Pollin and Heidi Garrett-Peltier of the Political Economy

Research Institute at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst,

(October 2009), spending the same dollars on the military (without

specifying war spending which would likely make the contrast even

greater) produces many fewer jobs than if spent in other industries.

If Ohio's Ninth District's $3.1 billion had been spent on tax cuts for

working people, instead of on the military, the people of the Ninth

District could have seen a net gain of 9,920 jobs.That's considering

the full impact of jobs lost, directly created, and indirectly

created.Military spending, purely in terms of job creation, is worse

than nothing.Tax cuts -- not for Mitt Romney but for the rest of us

-- does more good.

But the same study also shows a better path.If the $3.1 billion had

been taken away from the military and spent instead on clean energy,

we would have seen a net gain of 17,050 jobs.If instead the

investment had gone to healthcare, the net gain would have been 24,000

jobs.And if the choice had been to fund education, the gain in jobs

would have been 54,250.Could Ohio's Ninth District use 54,250 jobs?

Not many people would choose to chase those jobs away in order to

support wars based on lies, wars that endanger us, wars that devastate

the natural environment, wars that erode our civil liberties, wars

that carry a heavy human cost -- not just an economic one.Not many

people, but one of them is Marcy Kaptur.

If you visit Kaptur's campaign website at MarcyKaptur.com, only one

specific issue is immediately visible, front and center: celebration

of a World War II memorial.At Kucinich.us there is also only a

single issue immediately visible: a petition urging the Congressman's

colleagues to stop funding the war in Afghanistan.In the "Agenda"

section of Kaptur's site there is no acknowledgement that war or peace

is an issue to be considered at all.In the "Issues" section of

Kucinich's site, there is a section on war and peace that addresses a

number of specific wars.

There is also, on the Kucinich site, a lot more detail than on

Kaptur's about numerous other issues.The example of wars and war

funding is fairly typical.In rough terms, Kucinich tends to back

peace, justice, and the will of the public, while Kaptur tends to back

the very same things when and if the leadership of the Democratic

Party happens to do so.Back on February 25, 2010, she voted to

extend the PATRIOT Act without reforms of its abusive procedures.

Kucinich voted No.Back on October 23, 2007, Kucinich had also voted

No on the Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism Prevention Act,

while Kaptur voted Yes.On December 8, 2010, she voted against the

DREAM Act, while Kucinich and a majority of the House and of the

Democrats voted for it.Any elected official will let us down sometimes,

but Kaptur is just noKucinich. Many organizations agree. VoteSmart.org

lists the rankings of various groups.Planned Parenthood gives Kucinich

a score of 100%, Kaptur 71%.The ACLU scores Kucinich 94%, Kaptur 75%.

Also favoring Kucinich in their rankings are the Arab American

Institute, the Human Rights Campaign, the Leadership Conference on

Civil and Human Rights, the League of Conservation Voters, Peace

Action, the AFL-CIO, the SargentShriverNationalCenter on Poverty

Law, etc.I'm not being selective here.There don't seem to be any

progressive analysts scoring Kaptur over Kucinich on anything.

Progressives like Alan Grayson and Barney Frank are urging us to

support Kucinich over Kaptur.

How independent and principled a member of Congress is has a direct,

and sometimes devastating, impact on their district and the nation and

the world.Kaptur believes a nuclear power plant at the edge of Lake

Erie with a bad history of safety violations should be allowed to

continue to operate, while Kucinich has asked for it to be repaired or

decommissioned.Only one of these two representatives is putting the

safety of the public first.

I believe people who care about the future of the United States, from

Ohio's new Ninth District or anywhere else, should be following and

supporting Kucinich's campaign.If he loses, we lose.We may not

always agree with him.He may not always be able to win over a

majority of his colleagues.He may sometimes let us down.But were

he not there, votes that helped end the Iraq war would have never been

held.Debates that have helped curtail further war making would

simply not have happened.Articles of impeachment for Bush and Cheney

would never have been introduced.Countless witnesses before House

committees would have gotten off without ever facing the important

questions.Many people pushing for single-payer healthcare in their

states would have never heard of it.Our televisions would be better

able than they are now to pretend that majority positions on major

issues do not exist, because there would not be that one man in the

government willing to raise the issue and publicly lobby his

colleagues to join him.

We're such defeatists these days, that we either condemn Kucinich's

compromises, forgetting that Kaptur outdoes him in that regard

100-fold, or we imagine that because he's so much better he must be

doomed to lose.On the contrary, Kucinich has a long history of

winning congressional elections, both primaries and general.While

the redesigned district includes a larger population from Kaptur's

former district than from Kucinich's, it includes more Democrats from

Kucinich's than from Kaptur's.Kucinich inspires his supporters, and

in primaries it is the relative turnout of tiny percentages of people

that decides.

Who is in Congress or the White House is going to be of far less

importance than who is in the streets and what kind of people's

movement is developed to nonviolently resist injustice and war.But

without a single voice inside Congress willing to speak up in the ways

Kucinich has, the people's movement will suffer.There's no

lesser-evilism required here.Kucinich is actually a good

representative.There's no partisanship required here.Love a party

or hate them all; regardless, we should reward those who have listened

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